Arts Syndrome

Common Name(s)

Arts Syndrome

Arts syndrome is characterized by sensorineural hearing loss and serious neurological and immune system problems in males. Females can also be affected by this condition, but they typically have much milder symptoms. Arts syndrome is caused by mutations in the PRPS1 gene which is located on the X chromosome. It is inherited in an X-linked recessive manner.

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Advocacy and Support Organizations

Condition Specific Organizations

Following organizations serve the condition "Arts Syndrome" for support, advocacy or research.

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General Support Organizations

Recommended Apps

Anonymously share and see how your answers compare with others with this condition while privately providing key pieces of information to medical researchers, disease advocacy groups, and others ONLY YOU select to help speed up cures and better alternatives.

Finding the right clinical trial for Arts Syndrome can be challenging. However, with TrialsFinder (which uses the Reg4ALL database and privacy controls by Private Access), you can permit researchers to let you know opportunities to consider - all without revealing your identity.

Scientific Literature

Articles from the PubMed Database

Research articles describe the outcome of a single study. They are the published results of original research.
The terms "Arts Syndrome" returned 2 free, full-text research articles on human participants.
First 3 results:

Arts syndrome is an X-linked disorder characterized by mental retardation, early-onset hypotonia, ataxia, delayed motor development, hearing impairment, and optic atrophy. Linkage analysis in a Dutch family and an Australian family suggested that the candidate gene maps to Xq22.1-q24. ...

Reviews from the PubMed Database

Review articles summarize what is currently known about a disease. They discuss research previously published by others.
The terms "Arts Syndrome" returned 0 free, full-text review articles on human participants.

No free, full-text review articles on human participants are available at this time.
Please click this link to visit the PubMed website for results on "Arts Syndrome".

According to ClinicalTrials.gov there are currently 38 additional "open" studies for "Arts Syndrome" (open studies are recruiting volunteers) and 179 "Arts Syndrome" studies with "all" status. Visit ClinicalTrials.gov now to view them. Or alternatively, consider TrialsFinder for assistance:

Relief is when you and the right researcher find each other
Finding the right clinical trial for Arts Syndrome can be challenging. However, with TrialsFinder (which uses the Reg4ALL database and privacy controls by Private Access), you can permit researchers to let you know opportunities to consider - all without revealing your identity.